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Posted: Thu Aug 19, 2004 11:18 am Post subject: The Most Wanted Mullahs In Response To 16 Year Old Girl

cyrus wrote:

Finally the world can get a real view of WHAT the Mullahs are capable of...

A moving and shocking film about the execution of the 16-year-old girl, Atefeh Rajabi, who the Mullahs brutally murdered…A shocking and truthful view of what Islamo-fascists have done to our innocent people. We salute this brave young Iranian who gave her life to spite the tyrants and she, along with hundreds of thousand others who stood in the face of bloodthirsty and vicious radical Islamists.

The Heartbreaking And Enraging Story of a 16 Year Old Girl Executed by the Islamist Mafia Mullah Dictatorship on Sunday, August 15, in the town of Neka, Iran.

16 year old girl executed in Neka, Iran for "engaging in acts incompatible with chastity" in other words, pre-marital sex by the Corrupt Mafia Islamist Mullah's Regime.

Translation From Persian: By Khorshid ActivistChat Member

On Sunday August 15, 2004, a 16 year old girl by the name of Atefe Rajabi, daughter of Ghassem Rajabi, was executed in the town of Neka, located in the province of Mazandaran, for “engaging in acts incompatible with chastity”. The execution was carried out by the order of Neka’s “judicial administrator” and was approved by both the Supreme Court of the Islamic Republic and the chief of the nation’s “judiciary branch.”

Although according to her birth certificate she was only 16 years old, the local court falsely claimed that she was 22.

Three months ago, during her appearance before the local court, fiercely angry the young girl hurled insults at the local judge, Haji Reza, who is also the chief judicial administrator of the city, and it is said as another expression of protest took off some of her clothes in the courtroom. This act by the young girl made the administrator so furious that he evaluated her file personally and in less than three months received a go-ahead from the Islamic Republic’s Supreme Court for her execution. The animosity and anger of Haji Reza was so strong that he personally put the rope around the girl’s delicate neck and personally gave the signal to the crane operator, by raising his hand, to begin pulling the rope.

It may be noted that although according to the Islamic Republic’s own penal laws the presence of an attorney for the defense [is supposed to be] mandatory, regardless of the defendant’s ability to afford one, nevertheless the girl remained without an attorney. Her unfortunate father, while tears poured from his eyes, went about the city beseeching the townspeople for money to hire an attorney who in the least would provide his daughter with a line of defense.

The young girl was buried the same day after her execution but during that same night her corpse was disinterred by unknown individuals and robbed. The theft remains unexplained and the Rajabi family has filed a complaint.

The 16 year old girl’s male companion, who had been arrested as well, received 100 lashes and, after the Islamic punishment was carried out, released.

Dear My Fellow Freedom Loving Activists,

The murderous mullahs of Iran have executed another minor. The interviews of locals in the city of Neka conducted by Radio Farda revealed that this child was either mentally retarded or was suffering from a psychiatric illness.
As a physician and human right’s activist I can not express my outrage enough.
The terrorist regime in Iran has been killing children for the past twenty five years. The virgin girls are raped by these Islamic hooligans the night before their execution in order to” prevent them from going to heaven”.
We the Iranian people hold the E.U. and corporate sponsors of the terror regime responsible for continuation of tyrannies in Iran.
Please do your humanitarian share of responsibility and forward this content to the press, multinational corporations and government officials of your country of residence.
May god bless the souls of the genocide victims of the I.R.I.

Regime's Militia Officer in Charge of Vice in the city of Nekah, had a relationship with 16 year old Atefeh

Peykeiran: Reports published today on the ZananeIran (Iranian Women) web site and ISNA news agency in regards to the recent execution of a 16 year old girl from Nekah, haves verified many of the news stories from Peykeiran. Once again we will publish certain details from this case, which exposes hundreds of similar daily abuses in Iran. This report was first published on September 3rd, 2004 on Peykeiran.

"Peykeiran: After the public execution of a 16 year old girl by the name of Atefeh, in the city of Nekah in Mazandaran province, who was charged with ‘Activities Against Public Morality’, many other truths have been revealed about this cruel act that further enrage one.

Since Atefeh's family was very poor and she suffered from mental illness, she was very susceptible to sexual exploitation, although in the Islamic Republic this type of sexual exploitation is commonplace and routine. With prior knowledge of her vulnerable circumstances, several of the regime's militia were regularly taking advantage of her through friendly and immoral physical contacts.

2 Officers of the anti vice militia in Nekah were the most active in taking advantage of her, they were Sarvan Mola'i and Sarvan Zabihi. Atefeh had mentioned this on numerous occasions to a family member (who will remain anonymous). During her trial, Atefeh also mentioned her relationships with several of the regime's personnel.

Meanwhile the signature of both these officers as witnesses to her vice appear on the deposition. In another attempt at her discreditation, these 2 officers obtained additional signatures from their contacts and unknowing strangers around Rahe Ahan street, prior to her execution, that Atefeh had engaged in vice in the area while she had HIV Aids. In another ruse they started rumors around town that Atefeh had Aids, even though there are no medical records or actual evidence indicating that she did."

Atefeh's corpse was stolen right after her burial by the agents of the court and transferred to Tehran's Coroner, without the knowledge or consent of her family. This was only confirmed after Atefeh's aunt filed an official complaint. But there is still no news of a second burial.

Following her aunt's complaint, Atefeh’s father also wrote a letter to the government protesting the head of the Nekah court, Haji Rezai, the way her case was handled and the cruelty done to him and his family. He has also written another letter to international human rights organizations asking their assistance in seeking justice for the cruelty done to him and his family. This letter was typed up and translated by an organization in the city of Sari and sent out to Human Rights organizations.

It is interesting to note that the newspapers affiliated with the regime such as Etemad and Iran, have claimed in their reports that she was 22 years old, but they have never published the first page of her birth certificate as proof that she was. But her father, while sending his written complaint, included a Xerox copy of her birth certificate showing that she was only 16 years old. Her father also emphasized how she was denied legal counsel. But these news outlets, in an attempt to protect the regime's reputation are insisting that she was 22 years old.

[size=18]Please Ask Your Favorite Media To Cover This Story, What is Really Happening in Iran and the Hidden War Of Brave Girls against Mullahs the Killer Virus of Iranian Society with over 1.4 million victims and hidden support of Big 3 EU governments for Mafia Islamist regimes in past 25 years. Reviewing the contracts between Mullahs and Big 3 EU countries are the best prof of their extensive relations.

Amnesty International today expressed its outrage at the reported execution of a girl who is believed to be 16 years old, Ateqeh Rajabi, in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran, on 15 August, for "acts incompatible with chastity" (amal-e manafe-ye 'ofat). Ateqeh Rajabi was reportedly publicly hanged on a street in the city centre of Neka.

Amnesty International is alarmed that this execution was carried out despite reports that Ateqeh Rajabi was not believed to be mentally competent, and that she reportedly did not have access to a lawyer at any stage.

The execution of Ateqeh Rajabi is the tenth execution of a child offender in Iran recorded by Amnesty International since 1990. Amnesty International has urged Iran's judicial authorities to halt further executions of child offenders - people who were under 18 years old at the time of the offence. This is to bring Iran's law and practice in line with requirements of international human rights law.

A bill to raise the minimum age for execution to 18 was reportedly under consideration by parliament in December 2003. However, the bill is not believed to have been ratified by the Guardian Council, Iran's highest legislative body.

Amnesty International believes that the execution of Ateqeh Rajabi underlines the urgent necessity that Iran pass legislation removing provision for the execution of child offenders, thereby preventing further execution of child offenders, and bringing Iran into line with its obligations under international law.

Further, the organization is urging the authorities to clarify whether Ateqel Rajabi had legal representation and whether a legally approved doctor deemed her psychologically fit to stand trial.

Background
According to report on Peyk-e Iran, Ateqeh Rajabi was sentenced to death approximately three months ago, by a lower court in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran, for "acts incompatible with chastity".

During her trial, at which she was reportedly not represented by a lawyer, the judge allegedly severely criticised her dress, harshly reprimanding her. It is alleged that Ateqeh Rajabi was mentally ill both at the time of her crime and during her trial proceedings.

It is reported that although Ateqeh Rajabi's national ID card stated that she was 16 years old, the Mazandaran Judiciary announced at her execution that her age was 22.

The case reportedly attracted the attention of the Head of the Judiciary for the Mazandaran province, who ensured that the case be heard promptly by the Supreme Court. In Iran, all death sentences have to be upheld by the Supreme Court before they can be implemented.

The death sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court, and Ateqeh Rajabi was publicly hanged in the city centre of Neka on 15 August. According to Peyk-e Iran, the lower court judge that issued the original sentence was the person that put the noose around her head as she went to the gallows.

On the same night that she was buried, Ateqeh Rajabi's corpse was reportedly removed from the grave by unknown individuals. The Rajabi family have lodged a complaint and have called for an investigation.

The co-defendant of Ateqeh Rajabi, an unnamed man, was reportedly sentenced to 100 lashes. He was released after this sentence was carried out.

As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran is bound not to execute child offenders. Both treaties provide that capital punishment shall not be imposed for offences committed by persons under 18 year of age at the time of committing the offence.

Last edited by cyrus on Fri Aug 11, 2006 12:38 am; edited 42 times in total

The Heartbreaking And Enraging Story of a 16 Year Old Girl’s Execution Past Sunday in the Town of Neka

On Sunday August 15, 2004, a 16 year old girl by the name of Atefe Rajabi, daughter of Ghassem Rajabi, was executed in the town of Neka, located in the province of Mazandaran, for “engaging in acts incompatible with chastity”. The execution was carried out by the order of Neka’s “judicial administrator” and was approved by both the Supreme Court of the Islamic Republic and the chief of the nation’s “judiciary branch.”

Although according to her birth certificate she was only 16 years old, the local court falsely claimed that she was 22.

Three months ago, during her appearance before the local court, fiercely angry the young girl hurled insults at the local judge, Haji Reza, who is also the chief judicial administrator of the city, and it is said as another expression of protest took off some of her clothes in the courtroom. This act by the young girl made the administrator so furious that he evaluated her file personally and in less than three months received a go-ahead from the Islamic Republic’s Supreme Court for her execution. The animosity and anger of Haji Reza was so strong that he personally put the rope around the girl’s delicate neck and personally gave the signal to the crane operator, by raising his hand, to begin pulling the rope.

It may be noted that although according to the Islamic Republic’s own penal laws the presence of an attorney for the defense [is supposed to be] mandatory, regardless of the defendant’s ability to afford one, nevertheless the girl remained without an attorney. Her unfortunate father, while tears poured from his eyes, went about the city beseeching the townspeople for money to hire an attorney who in the least would provide his daughter with a line of defense.

The young girl was buried the same day after her execution but during that same night her corpse was disinterred by unknown individuals and robbed. The theft remains unexplained and the Rajabi family has filed a complaint.

The 16 year old girl’s male companion, who had been arrested as well, received 100 lashes and, after the Islamic punishment was carried out, released.

The Heartbreaking And Enraging Story of a 16 Year Old Girl’s Execution Past Sunday in the Town of Neka

On Sunday August 15, 2004, a 16 year old girl by the name of Atefe Rajabi, daughter of Ghassem Rajabi, was executed in the town of Neka, located in the province of Mazandaran, for “engaging in acts incompatible with chastity”. The execution was carried out by the order of Neka’s “judicial administrator” and was approved by both the Supreme Court of the Islamic Republic and the chief of the nation’s “judiciary branch.”

Although according to her birth certificate she was only 16 years old, the local court falsely claimed that she was 22.

Three months ago, during her appearance before the local court, fiercely angry the young girl hurled insults at the local judge, Haji Reza, who is also the chief judicial administrator of the city, and it is said as another expression of protest took off some of her clothes in the courtroom. This act by the young girl made the administrator so furious that he evaluated her file personally and in less than three months received a go-ahead from the Islamic Republic’s Supreme Court for her execution. The animosity and anger of Haji Reza was so strong that he personally put the rope around the girl’s delicate neck and personally gave the signal to the crane operator, by raising his hand, to begin pulling the rope.

It may be noted that although according to the Islamic Republic’s own penal laws the presence of an attorney for the defense [is supposed to be] mandatory, regardless of the defendant’s ability to afford one, nevertheless the girl remained without an attorney. Her unfortunate father, while tears poured from his eyes, went about the city beseeching the townspeople for money to hire an attorney who in the least would provide his daughter with a line of defense.

The young girl was buried the same day after her execution but during that same night her corpse was disinterred by unknown individuals and robbed. The theft remains unexplained and the Rajabi family has filed a complaint.

The 16 year old girl’s male companion, who had been arrested as well, received 100 lashes and, after the Islamic punishment was carried out, released.

A reminder to non-Iranian visitors reading this thread, that Atefe's case is not in any way a special case. It is merely the latest known occurence of this type of brutality. A young man during the Islamic-communist 79 revolution, I remember well the execution of children under the age of TEN, as children of Monarchists, and thus as potentional enemies. The journalist Amir Taheri, for those interested in reading on the subject, has named some of these children in his books. There were also a number of executions of centenarians (people 100 years old and above), also mentioned by Taheri. For instance a man 109 years old was executed, by a direct order from Khomeini, the Imam and leader of anti-Pahlavist lunatics such as Foruhar and Bazargan, for having served as an officer under Reza Shah. I can go on.

Cyrus, I like the picture very much. Thank you. In my mind, in addition to the reptiles forming the frame, I would also add the pictures of Elaine Sciolino, Gary Sick, Robin Wright, Shirin ("the moslem woman") Ebadi, the members of JM, the logo of the detestable and corrupt Amnesty International, Carter, and the rest.

-------------

A little girl lights a candle as part of the light installation called 'a million lights for the city Berlin' around the Berlin landmark Victory Column in the German capital's central Tiergarten Park, August 20, 2004. The installation by Iranian-born artist Misha Bolourie is accompanied by music from German composer Simon Stockhausen and stands for the rights of children around the world and living alongside one another peacefully. Some 5,000 children lit a million candles for the event on Friday night.

Well the Judge did possess her with his right hand!!
Clearly under Islamic law, the judge had the right to force himself on her.
And her refusal caused the Judge to have to take comfort with some sheep.
But he killed the sheep and did an ablution so everything is okay.

So now he is killing her for causing him to go through this misery! But don't worry! Under Islamic law, the Judge has done the right thing.

Amnesty International today expressed its outrage at the reported execution of a girl who is believed to be 16 years old, Ateqeh Rajabi, in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran, on 15 August, for "acts incompatible with chastity" (amal-e manafe-ye 'ofat). Ateqeh Rajabi was reportedly publicly hanged on a street in the city centre of Neka.

Amnesty International is alarmed that this execution was carried out despite reports that Ateqeh Rajabi was not believed to be mentally competent, and that she reportedly did not have access to a lawyer at any stage.

The execution of Ateqeh Rajabi is the tenth execution of a child offender in Iran recorded by Amnesty International since 1990. Amnesty International has urged Iran's judicial authorities to halt further executions of child offenders - people who were under 18 years old at the time of the offence. This is to bring Iran's law and practice in line with requirements of international human rights law.

A bill to raise the minimum age for execution to 18 was reportedly under consideration by parliament in December 2003. However, the bill is not believed to have been ratified by the Guardian Council, Iran's highest legislative body.

Amnesty International believes that the execution of Ateqeh Rajabi underlines the urgent necessity that Iran pass legislation removing provision for the execution of child offenders, thereby preventing further execution of child offenders, and bringing Iran into line with its obligations under international law.

Further, the organization is urging the authorities to clarify whether Ateqel Rajabi had legal representation and whether a legally approved doctor deemed her psychologically fit to stand trial.

Background
According to report on Peyk-e Iran, Ateqeh Rajabi was sentenced to death approximately three months ago, by a lower court in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran, for "acts incompatible with chastity".

During her trial, at which she was reportedly not represented by a lawyer, the judge allegedly severely criticised her dress, harshly reprimanding her. It is alleged that Ateqeh Rajabi was mentally ill both at the time of her crime and during her trial proceedings.

It is reported that although Ateqeh Rajabi's national ID card stated that she was 16 years old, the Mazandaran Judiciary announced at her execution that her age was 22.

The case reportedly attracted the attention of the Head of the Judiciary for the Mazandaran province, who ensured that the case be heard promptly by the Supreme Court. In Iran, all death sentences have to be upheld by the Supreme Court before they can be implemented.

The death sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court, and Ateqeh Rajabi was publicly hanged in the city centre of Neka on 15 August. According to Peyk-e Iran, the lower court judge that issued the original sentence was the person that put the noose around her head as she went to the gallows.

On the same night that she was buried, Ateqeh Rajabi's corpse was reportedly removed from the grave by unknown individuals. The Rajabi family have lodged a complaint and have called for an investigation.

The co-defendant of Ateqeh Rajabi, an unnamed man, was reportedly sentenced to 100 lashes. He was released after this sentence was carried out.

As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran is bound not to execute child offenders. Both treaties provide that capital punishment shall not be imposed for offences committed by persons under 18 year of age at the time of committing the offence.

Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2004 10:47 am Post subject: As a physician and activist I can not express my outrage

Dear My Fellow Freedom Loving Activists,

The murderous mullahs of Iran have executed another minor. The interviews of locals in the city of Neka conducted by Radio Farda revealed that this child was either mentally retarded or was suffering from a psychiatric illness.
As a physician and human right’s activist I can not express my outrage enough.
The terrorist regime in Iran has been killing children for the past twenty five years. The virgin girls are raped by these Islamic hooligans the night before their execution in order to” prevent them from going to heaven”.
We the Iranian people hold the E.U. and corporate sponsors of the terror regime responsible for continuation of tyrannies in Iran.
Please do your humanitarian share of responsibility and forward this content to the press, multinational corporations and government officials of your country of residence.
May god bless the souls of the genocide victims of the I.R.I.

TEHRAN -- German carmaker BMW on Tuesday delivered 10 vehicles to Iran for the first time in many years, a BMW representative in Tehran told the AFP news agency.

Customs had passed two vehicles from BMW's Five series, while formalities for the remaining cars were expected to be completed in the coming days. The cars had all already been sold before being transported to Iran. Iran has only allowed car imports since 2003, and then only after imposing custom duties ranging from 130 to 300 percent of the vehicle's sale price.

The BMWs, which would have cost around â‚¬45,000 (around $54,500) in Germany, cost a total of â‚¬120,000 in Iran. An Iranian city resident would have to work 38 years to earn that much money.

And the International Monetary Fund urges Iran to (stop the executions?? Na...) rein in govt' spending..

IMF Tells Iran to Rein in Gov't Spending, Subsidies

Reuters - World News
Aug 24, 2004

TEHRAN -- Iran risks economic instability and low growth if it allows its current account to plunge deep into the red and fails to rein in generous public spending, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Tuesday.

It said Iran's buoyant 6.7 percent GDP growth could be hauled down by rampant liquidity growth and the current account sliding into deficit in 2004/2005.

"These (factors), together with weaknesses in the financial system, could lead to macroeconomic instability and low growth rates," said the IMF's preliminary conclusions from its "Article IV" annual review of Iran's economy.

"Efforts to rein in government spending are needed in 2004/05 to contain liquidity growth and build savings in the OSF," the report added.

The findings were posted on the Central Bank of Iran Web site.

The IMF said Tehran had been lavishing money on subsidies and raiding the Oil Stabilisation Fund (OSF), a rainy-day kitty whose reserves oil-rich Iran should be bolstering while crude prices flirt with record highs.

The IMF forecast liquidity growth of broad money supply (M2) would hit 29 percent in the year to March 2005, outstripping government forecasts of 20 to 24 percent.

Iran is debating a five-year economic development plan (2005-2010) over the course of which the reformist government has targetted average annual economic growth of eight percent. The IMF thought this figure was optimistic.

"Real GDP is forecast to average 5.5 percent," the report said, using models that pencilled in a gradual oil price fall to a barrel at the end of the period.

The IMF reiterated its view, aired in June, that growth in the year to March 2005 would be about 6.5 percent.

The current account deficit was seen widening progressively after the surplus swings into the red in 2004/2005 and the OSF's reserves could be exhausted by 2010.

Iran's current account surplus fell to 1.5 percent of GDP in 2003/2004 from 13 percent of GDP in 2000/2001.

IRAN SAYS DEFICIT NOT SHORT-TERM CONCERN

But Ebrahim Sheibani, governor of the Central Bank of Iran, said foreign reserves and the low level of foreign debt meant the current account should not cause alarm.

"This trend is not of major concern over the short term," he said in another statement posted on the bank's Web site.

Tehran's largesse, the IMF said, meant the fiscal deficit could expand to 1.4 percent of GDP in the year to March 2005 from 0.2 percent in the previous year.

"All of the increase in oil revenue due to higher oil prices will be used by the budget... non-oil revenue and privatisation receipts seem to be overestimated," it said.

The Washington-based organisation exhorted Iran to phase out spending 10 percent of its GDP on subsidising fuel, which fetches a humble 10 cents per litre at the pumps.

The report also urged Iran to curb credit to the rapidly growing private sector and limit banks' access to the central bank's overdraft facility.

It also called for more zealous supervision of the financial sector. Many private Iranian banks are offering interest rates on savings well above central bank guidelines.

However, the IMF also called for the implementation of the package of liberalising reforms in the five-year plan that conservative parliamentarians are now largely unravelling.

"The mission ... calls for its steadfast implementation," the IMF said.

Lawmakers this month voted out key articles opening up the banking and energy sectors to much-needed privatisation and foreign investment._________________Referendum AFTER Regime Change

"I'm ready to die for you to be able to say your own opinions, even if i strongly disagree with you" (Voltaire)

Dear Fellow Freedom Loving People and ActivistChat Members,
Currently we are monitoring all the Major Media, we are demanding and expecting all major media publish or broadcast this news.
We expect politicians and political parties to issue strong condemnations and call for immediate regime change in Iran NOW. As you see or hear the broadcast regarding this subject please Post it here to inform other fellow ActivistChat members.

Amnesty International has issued a sharp rebuke to Iran for what it says was the judicial execution of a 16-year-old girl for "acts incompatible with chastity."

As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran is bound not to execute child offenders. Both treaties provide that capital punishment shall not be imposed for offences committed by persons under 18 year of age at the time of committing the offence.

But Ateqeh Rajabi was the tenth child executed by the Islamic state since 1990, according to AI.

More, the human rights watchdog says, it appears the girl never had access to legal representation at any time following her arrest.

AI says the execution was carried out despite reports that Ateqeh Rajabi was not believed to be mentally competent, either at the time of the alleged "crime" or during her trial proceedings.

The organisation has called for Iran to pass legislation removing provision for the execution of child offenders, thereby preventing further execution of child offenders, and bringing Iran into line with its obligations under international law.

"During her trial, at which she was reportedly not represented by a lawyer, the judge allegedly severely criticised her dress, harshly reprimanding her," AI reports.

The sentencing judge also served as executioner, AI reports.

She was sentenced to death approximately three months ago, by a lower court in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran.

The case reportedly attracted the attention of the Head of the Judiciary for the Mazandaran province, who ensured that the case was heard by the Supreme Court. In Iran, all death sentences have to be upheld by the Supreme Court before they can be implemented, AI reports.

The death sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court, and Ateqeh Rajabi was publicly hanged in the city centre of Neka on 15 August.

Her co-defendant in the transgression, an unnamed man, was reportedly sentenced to 100 lashes. He was released after this sentence was carried out.

Although the girl's national identification card stated that she was 16 years old, the Mazandaran Judiciary announced at her execution that her age was 22.